PlayMakers Repertory Company’s production of Tony Kushner’s “Angels in America,” directed by Brendon Fox, has taken flight.
When producing the two-part epic, a theater not only encounters the stratagems and difficulties of staging a seven-hour show, but also the inevitable hype attached to perhaps the most influential theater piece of the late 21st century.
PlayMakers’ production of Part 1, “Millennium Approaches,” at times was flat and fell short of Artistic Director Joseph Haj’s claim that “Angels” may be the most important show PlayMakers ever puts on.
But Part 2, “Perestroika,” had rolling momentum and the power to floor attendees.
Detailing the strife of two couples, one heterosexual and one homosexual, enduring the 1980s AIDS epidemic amidst the cultural politics of the Reagan-era United States, “Angels in America” is a monster of thought provocation.
In the American melting pot “where nothing has melted,” laundry lists of hefty issues are illuminated in settings ranging from Department of Justice bathroom stalls to Valium-induced hallucinations of Antarctica.
Part 1 had many of these spectacularly staged episodes.
Jeffrey Cornell’s Roy Cohn is modeled after a widely detested New York lawyer and is raised out of a trap door, blaring high powered Gordon Gekko-like obscenities into an office phone.
To symbolize the South Pole fantasy of the sanity-slipping Harper Pitt, played by Marianne Miller, a white sheet is used to envelop the playing space while a fog machine accents the frozen environment.